To prove the authenticity of the data, the group of hackers published the personal details of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, along with his predecessor Abdullah Gul, and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

The attack seems to be politically motivated, as the hackers wrote the following message on the database's front page, featuring Erdogan's profile:

"Who would have imagined that backwards ideologies, cronyism and rising religious extremism in Turkey would lead to a crumbling and vulnerable technical infrastructure?"

Lessons Posted by Hackers

Besides the leaked database, the hackers also provided some lessons to learn from this leak. Under the heading Lessons for Turkey, the hackers wrote:

'Bit shifting isn't encryption,' referring to the fact that the data was improperly protected.

'Index your database. We had to fix your sloppy DB work.'

'Putting a hardcoded password on the UI hardly does anything for security,' though the hackers didn't specify in what UI.

'Do something about Erdogan! He is destroying your country beyond recognition.'

Under the heading Lessons for the United States, the hackers addressed US citizens, asking them not to elect Republican front-runner Donald Trump since he 'sounds like he knows even less about running a country than Erdogan does.'

Links to Download the Database

The database is available online on a Finland-based server. Though the source of the leaked data is currently unknown, it is likely from a Turkish public administration office that deals with users' personal information.

If the authenticity of all 50 Million records gets verified, the breach will be the biggest leaks after the one that occurred in U.S. government's Office of Personnel Management (OPM) in April 2015 that…